The Bird of Cthulu is summoned by the blood feather, which is dropped by parrots with a 25% chance, during a pirate invasion. The Bird of Cthulu is a giant bird with 25000 HP, dealing lots of damage easily. While the blood feather can be used as soon as you have defeated the pirate invasion, it is not recommended to fight the boss until you have post plantera gear.
@@Yeetbloxian I like that idea, maybe make it the Raven King; a Halloween-exclusive boss. He can only be summoned at night in a graveyard using the blood feather. The blood feather has a 6.66% drop chance from Ravens. (or were they crows? I don't remember lol).
@@Yeetbloxian graveyards make more sense given the spooky bird theme. Also graveyards can technically be infinitely big, because it's an artificial biome.
My cockatiel had one once. There was just two drops of blood and before I had time to think how to grab him and pull it, he did it himself. He made the same little yelp and he was sore a day or so in his wing but good as new.
For people who dont understand, the feather NEEDED to be taken out because the cockatiel was bleeding and birds dont have much blood as humans so they can die of bleeding. So please stop trying to say it was horrible, when it was for the cockatiel's life
Good job, guys. Saved that little dude’s life. Also, can we talk about this: Bird: *squeaks* Everyone in the video: “awww🥺” I just love how in sync it was.
@@havefuntazarasu5367 the bird would have bled to death because the feather has a crack or something and the bird is bleeding and the feather prevents it from healing. By pulling the feather out it allows the wound to heal
Because no one else seems to be saying it: GOOD JOB! You did it fast and clearly only caused the pain that was necessary to fix the situation! You're obviously a good owner and it shows
@lillys moref dude most birds DIE before they reach the vet because of the crazy wait times. If you know what you're doing, better to just do it then let the bird die a painful death
For everyone wondering, blood feathers are normal they’ll happen a few times in a birds life. They get them by crashing into things, or falling. You have to find the feather that is bleeding, and pull it out to stop the bleeding. If you don’t, then the bird can bleed to death very fast because they don’t have a lot of blood to begin with. It might hurt them for a second, but it saves their lives.
Here are some lessons: 1. Feathers have been used for quills for untold centuries because they can wick up ink and then the pressure against paper extrudes it again. 2. Feathers are connected to a birds circulatory system. They NORMALLY don't flood with blood because when they are healthy and undamaged, they will not actually wick up the blood. 3. That only works if the feather is UNdamaged. If there is a break or crack in the feather's shaft, that feather is now acting like an open tube in an artery. The blood will not stop. The skin at the base is mostly or completely undamaged so it can't close the wound (since it's in the feather). The *feather* has no structures to stop blood loss. Result: bird bleeds to death. Solution:... THIS. Pull out the feather, the skin seals up, blood loss stops. Bird lives. These people are caring and awesome and saved the bird's life. Absolutely amazing people!! They did it as quickly as possible to make it as painless as possible.
@@wavemade2313 Yes. It's like when blood doesn't coagulate under certain conditions and even a superficial wound, if it doesn't stop, can lead to serious problems. Another example would be a little wound after some teeth extraction. If there's bacteria surrounding the wound, no matter how little the wound may be or how little the bacteria are, that entrance will lead directly to the brain and cause devastating damage. It's sort of like that one "thread" that, if pullen out, can cause the entire "cloth" to dismantle. I had a situation years ago where, after an accident playing sports, I got a small fracture in my hand, but back then, since it was only general check-ups, it was looked as something light. Months later that same year, I started having these frequent and more intense pains in my left arm's wrist. I went to a specialist with my family and this time, I took a resonance test (which allows for a completely clean view on bones, which regular check-ups fail because there's a lot of other organic material, like muscles, and what-not, that doesn't allow for a clear view). The results were a small, yet growing fracture on a specific part of the wrist. So, normally, when a bone breaks, it is capable of regenerating by making contact with the part that is supposed to have been connected with. However, here's the catch: The regenerative process can only be acomplished if the two ends make contact, which wasn't the case with the little fracture I had, since there was a considerable hole in-between that wasn't filled with bone tissue, so instead of getting better, the parts kept distancing from each other. That's why, since I'm left-handed, whenever I wrote, my hand started to hurt. Back then, I was in my last year of high school, and months passed without me getting a surgery to fill in the gap in-between the injury. Basically, it was a slight pain initially, but then it escalated to the point where I was in such a pain that I almost literally lost my last year of high school because of my inability to write. It was that bad. Eventually, surgery happened and it hurt like hell, but managed to get through it, though, my wrist isn't exactly as "mobile" as before, but, I mean, better that than losing my mobility altogether, right?😅 Anyway, I brought it up as an experience I wanted to share and let you know that the biggest things always start small, and with this little birdy-pal there's no exception! God bless you and I hope that what I've said enriches your knowledge!❤💙🤍💫🕊
@@jonathancarrion0809XXI ty for the knowledge!!! I didnt know and wouldnt have guessed that bone needed to touch even though that does make sense once explained 💗💗
@@ThirrinDiamond No problem! For the most part, it's like glue; you'd need to put both ends as closely as possible. Otherwise, either it doesn't heal properly or at all.
y’all realize that was the right feather? it was clearly bent/broken which can cause the developing feather to bleed. blood feathers don’t just start randomly bleeding unless they’re damaged
So i need some help with my bird,so please answer me of you know anything! I have two male Indian ringnecks, one of them started to molt in January and his molting was pretty quick, however the other one one started molting 4 months ago and still hasn't stopped,well i don't know if he's molting ,I'm afraid it's actually plucking. I saw his behavior slowly changing during his molting , i know molting can cause a lot of stress but he's still stressed now, I'm afraid he's plucking his feathers because it's only on his chest and tail. The thing that worries me the most is that he plucks out his tail feathers to the point of bleeding, the other bird is fine and they're used to their environment and have good food, but i think the molting started to stress him a lot and he can't recover anymore. Please help me I'm lost and i don't want him to suffer anymore. Thank you
@@icowwol2147 i think the birds should go to the vet and get some antibiotics thats all i can do man and also try to cure the wounds with thyme tea (if they have any wounds)
Anyone else notice how the bird seems slightly less freaked out after the feather is pulled? Like, after the small scream it just looks around like- "Wait, why DID you do that?"
You can clearly tell how well taken care of that burd is, they can absolutely bite hard enough to draw blood. All the burd did was a little nervous nibble, it was well behaved and had plenty of time and room to refuse getting it pulled out. You did it fast and efficiently while still being gentle and trying to calm it as much as possible. Good job saving your bird’s life
My mom had a cockatiel that mostly nibbled, but he was very gentle. If only my nephew had learned to leave his cage alone, he would have been at our house for a long time.
@@JustaDislikeButton how would you react if a giant hairless animals picked you up restrained your movement and ripped out part of you for the situation the bird was calm
Poor bugger, that wee yelp. I had a cockatiel as a kid, used to shout “Ya fucker” at people and animals he didn't like. His replacement didn't swear sadly but I taught him to say “tits”. RIP Casper and Casper II.
@@theguythatasked5811 both lovely birds, they both liked to be handled and sit on my shoulder. Not sure why I've never had one as an adult to be honest, though I have three cats that like to hunt so it probably isn't the best idea. I couldn't leave a bird in a cage constantly.
Notice how she was biting and acting up leading up to the blood feather being removed, then settled right down afterwards. I know nothing about birds but I can tell that was relieving for her.
Well it’s wings are clipped and they didn’t clip the wings correctly so that’s how they got a blood feather. It is animal abuse because your not supposed to clip their wings.
Blood feathers for everyone asking are broken or damaged feathers. Basically their feathers work similar to the human arteries where they push blood in and through them. This is the same reason they can be used to write as the empty tube where the blood is stored also holds ink well hence the quill feather. The issue is, that birds circulatory systems push blood through quick, and they're small so there isn't much blood to be had, so when a feather breaks it will continue to bleed until it is removed which can cause the poor bird to bleed out and die in as little as half an hour or even much much less depending on the severity of the break and number of breaks. If you see your bird bleeding from it's feathers, do what this guy did identity the broken feather and quickly but sharply pull and remove the feather. It will hurt the bird, but can and will save his lil life. Hope that clears things up!
I'm scared this will happen to my bird because he doesn't like to be handled the same way as the bird in the video and will bite the hell outta anyone who tries
I just think it’s hilarious that all the people in the comments talking about how they’re cruel for taking out this feather clearly don’t know anything about birds. Guys it’s OK to not be educated on something but don’t try to demonize people just because you don’t understand.
for everyone wondering where all the stupid "animal justice" comments actually are, its the classic feedback loop of being flooded with backlash, then deleting the comment
The people who talked about taking out the feather being wrong were in the previous era of this comment section so we’re shoved to the bottom of comments, we are now in the wiser era of a comment section
It's funny the feather might have been pulled in the wrong spot. You're supposed to grab the base near the skin and pull from there otherwise you create a straw where blood pools out. I don't think they got the base out in the video but I'm sure they did after the filming. It should be said to grab the base of the feather, not the tip, or you have a good chance of not getting the whole thing out.
Birb not pleased, not happy, is angry: *Does not bite human hard enough to pierce skin* Me: Birb loves his human Edit: Forgot I commented here and hot damn…it exploded…with a comment war to boot. Cockatiels can be trained not to bite. I had one who would attack my hand when I held a spoons, lipstick, Hatsume Miku, and my Xbox controller; doing the head motions, beak open, but never pinched or touched my skin; an air bite. There’s even a RUclips video of a cockatiel doing the same when another birb was being given scratches. It is possible
@@smoke8715 why are you butthurt moron ? Your comment expressed nothing except that you're another douchebag who writes these cancerous comments...idiot
Yeah, every cockatiel we've owned we allowed to basically have an open cage (closed it when opening house doors of course just in case), they were pretty well behaved and always came back to their cage. ...but... Every time I stuck my hand in there to clean the cage they would bite the shit out of me. Break the skin every single time, they'd make you bleed like a stuck pig. We tried to tame them, they would fly around, land on us, we'd think "oh cool, they finally trust us" as they snuggle on our neck... *BITE EARLOBE* "Son of a bitch!!!" getting up bleeding from ear, hanging on like a predator that just found it's dinner. Yeah, no. The cockatiel phase did not last long. We later got some finches. Those were cool birds.
These guys did really good. The biting was probably a reaction to the fact that was in pain and bleeding out. And he doesn't exactly have a lot of blood to spare. They talked to the bird calmly to help keep him calm, held him so that he wasn't moving too much, and quickly removed the bent and broken feather that was obviously causing him a lot of pain. I'm sure the pain was like pulling out a sticker that you've stepped on and jammed deep into your foot. It hurts for a little bit, but after a while the spot heals up and the bird is perfectly fine. To leave the obviously damaged feather there would have absolutely been abuse. They did this in the most painless way possible and saved the little bird's life. Way to go
sometimes people will call anything animal abuse and it's sad because there's so much actual abuse that needs to be stopped but people are focusing on stuff like this. if it hurts the animal short term but prevents a very dangerous condition it's not abuse, it's caring for your animal properly.
I once saw an idiot say that these owners of a cat with a medical condition that causes weight gain, abusers even though they cant control it and have been trying to do everything they can to help their cat lose weight. Some people toss words around so much, so idiotic.
@@nitrogenjutsu5178 I like to think that every time an animal makes a yelping type of sound that sounded sad, their actually saying a curse word or "Look where you're standin' f××khead!" Type of talk lol
The fact he didn't bite you hard enough to make you bleed even when he was in pain and scared shows just how much he trusted you. Thankyou for dealing with this quickly and efficiently
Y'all stop saying "He pulled out the wrong one", this video has been posted 3 year ago and the owner said that the bird is fine and alive. If it was the wrong one the bird would've died and this video wouldn't be posted.
How exactly do we know it's the wrong feather though? The one her pulled looked out of place on the bird, I'm not an expert. I'm just asking for clarification.
@@bluhearts5216 people are saying it was a bent feather but not a blood feather, so they didn’t pull out the thing causing the blood but they pulled a feather that wasn’t really supposed to be there anyway
A mercenaries comes in to the Witch's shop... Mercenaries : Excuse me, I'd just collected 12 blood feather from the dozen of Giant Blood Owl corpses from the Deep Haunt Forest...Were these quest items enough to fulfill the rewards? Witch : I said Magical Feather from the Mythical Griffin, not THAT!...No...Keep searching that ACTUAL quest items...🤦🏻♀️ (FYI : This is just a joke...)
At first I didn’t understand……….I thought you were hurting it!!!!! WOW!!!! I didn’t know such things 🙄 Which is WHY it’s important to watch to the end before jumping off the proverbial cliff. Thank you for fixing that naughty feather 🪶!!!
You could tell the bird trusts the humans because he’s not fighting all that hard. They did a good job of working as quickly as they could while still being gentle.
@lillys moref I made a troll remark to you in another thread but here I'll be serious cause it's worth the knowledge. First and foremost most birds shouldn't be pets. Imagine living in a single room house that's just big enough for your whole life. It would drive you insane. There are, however, birds that have been domesticated enough that can tolerate it and honestly it's fine to have them as pets. I'm thinking more exotic birds. Anywho that's neither here nor there cause I'm rambling. Now on to clipping wings. If your bird is pretty docile and well trained then yeah you probably don't need to clip the wings. But here's some legit reasons as to why you should and actually which ones. If you have ceiling fans and you want to let your bird out to explore a bit. If they are injured and need to rest. If they are a non native species and there's a risk of them flying away. And probably some other reasons that I don't want to keep going on with. When I had I quaker parrot I would clip his wings cause he'd like to explore around when I let him out of his cage. To actually keep him safe his wings were clipped cause I would regularly have the ceiling fans going and he legit flew the blades once and nearly gave me a heart attack. Now back to clipping wings. You should never clip the entire wing. Even if you know what you are doing. All you have to do is clip a couple of the feathers on each side of the inside of the wing known as the flight feathers. These feathers are far more important for flight. By clipping only a couple you don't necessarily take away the full power of flight but rather make it more difficult for them. They usually can gain a bit of height but tire out quickly as it's more of a chore for them to keep aloft. Also you only clip the inside of the wing because cosmetically it looks better. When they have their wings to their side it looks normal still. Only when they spread their winds should it be noticable but just barely if you did a good job.
Human was gentle, he did not force the bird to be handled, you can see the bird had plenty of chance to get out of his grasp. Bird did not like being handled, yet knew it was for a reason. Bird. For those bring politics into this, it has nothing to do with that. People get bored and have no understanding of handling an animal, and are looking for attention so they get pointlessly mad and other people that didnt think of what they said first follow along for likes
I keep seeing people say "for those of you who think it's the wrong feather.." And honestly just wanna know what other feather they could possibly have pulled out
It was clearly the wrong feather, birds are a conspiracy by the government to spy on us, blood feathers are actually made to contain blood samples from their attacks, so you can see the blood on the inside cause they are like glass vials smh.
I’ve studied small animal care, I can tell you that they pulled the wrong feather and could have caused the bird harm. They didn’t do any research, clearly, as they’d know that wasn’t the correct feather if they had. :)
@@amtadoptmetrades6024 I mean if you’d like to see my qualifications I’m more than happy to post a public picture and give you the link honey, I’m more than aware what I’m talking about. :)
@@lollol-el8oy she's only qualified on Twitter they do know what they're doing and they did remove the correct feather the feather they removed was a blood feather, it's a feather that's still growing and has blood in it, the feather got damaged if they did not remove the feather the bird could have bled out and died the bent feather that everyone saw is also damaged but it's nothing serious and its common on birds who are allowed to fly around in there homes
This bird gently resisting while having a broken feather plucked: ouch 🥺 My birds when I try to gently lift them to get them into their travel cage: screaming like I'm murdering them, biting through my gauntlet I have to wear to protect myself. They're very young and untamed, but we're making progress.
Amazing news! I gave my boy a dry mealworm and he was so bewitched by that crunchy treat that he forgot about my fingers and actually nibbled on them to get every crumb 🤣
@lillys moref actually no this kind of bird when it bites can do a lot of damage it was just reacting uncomfortably if it was being hurt or wanted to bite the guy his finger would be in pieces
My dad had a Bird that fell asleep in his hands, i was around 2 or 3 when My cousin brought his cat and when he Saw his cat in My dad's room, he Freed the bird so the cat could eat it.
"Be firm, he's not a baby" All he is doing is reassuring him that he is in good hands. I always talk calmly with my pets when they are in pain or scared.
If time is a factor it is cruel to risk the pets life by cuddle and reassuring it. Cuddles can be given when the life is saved. Birds don't have much blood to lose. Maybe the owner just loves their oyets more than you do. I always prioritize saving lives my self. Cuddling comes second.
@@idamelisen so you're telling me that you don't know a thing about birds and how fast they bleed out? Ok message received. But some of us actually do care about our pets and educate our selves on what they need.
i like how everyone says “aww 🥺” after he made that squeak. you can tell they love and have compassion for it, people like that usually have compassion for all life ❤️🌎🐾
Actually not from infection but from bleeding out , a bird will die if the broken blood feather isn't removed cause a growing feather has direct connection to the birds blood stream but after the feather if done growing the vain seals itself and the shaft forms blockage inside that prevents anymore blood from entering.
I love how gentle and reassuring everyone was, amazing to see great teamwork, even the tiel behaved very well! Hope it got lots of treats for it's trouble and recovered well!
before anyone freaks out, the bird damaged their blood feather, it’s a feather connected straight to a vein, and they will bleed to death if it is damaged. if your bird has a fine blood feather, leave it alone. if it is broken, take it out immediately. it will hurt for a quick bit, but it’s much better than dying
@@vinnyvv. the right one is a Pin feather (Newly grown feather) it has a vein inside the shaft that causes the bleed. Trust me the feather he pulled was a bent one and wasn’t even covered with blood enough for it to be the cause and do not have any vains in them anymore and got pulled out Easily because it’s a fully grown feather.
Poor little birdie looks so scared and in pain, but clearly trusts you enough to not bite too hard or struggle too much. You're doing really good work.
Okay but blood feather would be a badass name for a band or something
There's a song with that name
Amon Armarth has one called blood eagle.
Probably for emo canadian rap music
Sounds like the name of a monster or an attack name from a fantasy genre!
“Go Rose Dragon! Attack with Blood Feather!”
Dear the old feather…
Bird: LET MEH GO
Human: fixes the problem*
Bird: this is acceptable
😂😂😂 gen z humor kills me, i luv u guys
@@sfr2107 I didn’t know we were gen z .-. I thought I was gen Cleft XD (no joke I didn’t know lol) and thanks
@@AngelsGrace i was assuming? Lol but what's gen cleft? How old r u?
Bird's like: "Understandable, have a nice day"
@[[Z1MTRD_]] You were the only person that read my mind and said what was there. Thank you.
when he said "ä〇" i felt that
How tf you just spell out the sound of a squawk tho
It's female. You can tell by its color patterns which is cool
I love how you spelled squawk lol
😂😂😂😂😂😂
😕
Blood feather sounds like a Terraria boss summoning item
Brooo 😭🤣 your not wrong
The Bird of Cthulu is summoned by the blood feather, which is dropped by parrots with a 25% chance, during a pirate invasion. The Bird of Cthulu is a giant bird with 25000 HP, dealing lots of damage easily. While the blood feather can be used as soon as you have defeated the pirate invasion, it is not recommended to fight the boss until you have post plantera gear.
@@Yeetbloxian I like that idea, maybe make it the Raven King; a Halloween-exclusive boss. He can only be summoned at night in a graveyard using the blood feather. The blood feather has a 6.66% drop chance from Ravens. (or were they crows? I don't remember lol).
@@tims.1615 ooh i like that, but i say the crimson and corruption should be the summoning biomes, since graveyards are small
@@Yeetbloxian graveyards make more sense given the spooky bird theme. Also graveyards can technically be infinitely big, because it's an artificial biome.
My cockatiel had one once. There was just two drops of blood and before I had time to think how to grab him and pull it, he did it himself. He made the same little yelp and he was sore a day or so in his wing but good as new.
Such a good bird, I hope he got lots of love and treats afterwards
smart man
Far Cry moment
Thanos moment
@@user-ek2xg3ps5s That *is* a Far Cry moment. Man literally fixed the problem himself.
the chrous of ""awws"" after the bird yelped brought back my faith in humanity
YES I was looking for another comment saying that because I knew I couldn’t be the first person that loved that part
It's so cute pls
@@luxbunny8678 ngl, i didnt even notice until i read op's comment.
Nope humans are still doomed as are TikTok kids i hope I'll be dead before the world ends tho
Factz!
For people who dont understand, the feather NEEDED to be taken out because the cockatiel was bleeding and birds dont have much blood as humans so they can die of bleeding. So please stop trying to say it was horrible, when it was for the cockatiel's life
WHERE ARE THEY
Exactly and some people say it should be taken by a vet. THE BIRD CAN DIE QUICKLY YOU DONT KNOW THAT THE BLOOD FEATHER IS SERIOUS, RIGHT.
I always wondered why people freaked about blood feathers, I didn't know it was that serious so thank you for explaining.
I love how this comment implies that humans can’t die from bleeding 😂
@@pantasticlaire3966 Sir, what the fuck?
Good job, guys. Saved that little dude’s life.
Also, can we talk about this:
Bird: *squeaks*
Everyone in the video: “awww🥺”
I just love how in sync it was.
is cute
that moment right 💚💚🥺
Is this animal curelty? Why they do that?
@@havefuntazarasu5367 the bird would have bled to death because the feather has a crack or something and the bird is bleeding and the feather prevents it from healing. By pulling the feather out it allows the wound to heal
I made the sound of the same time with them.
My bird died because of a broken blood feather so seeing that you are taking care of your bird early makes me happy ❤️
I'm sorry for your loss.
@@grape_protogen thank you 💕
Sorry for loss, hope they are chilling on a better place.
Wait what it is possible that feather cause death ??? My bird has one of those too
@@orhandark8137 Yes, birds can bleed to death from a blood feather as there's no way for the blood to clot unless the feather is pulled
Because no one else seems to be saying it: GOOD JOB! You did it fast and clearly only caused the pain that was necessary to fix the situation! You're obviously a good owner and it shows
@lillys moref dude most birds DIE before they reach the vet because of the crazy wait times. If you know what you're doing, better to just do it then let the bird die a painful death
@lillys moref do you understand how much blood tiny birds have?? Its not a lot. Most of them die before getting to the vet.
@lillys moref the video cut off. How do you know they didn't turn off the video specifically to do that?
@lillys moref You do realize not everyone has to say everything that they do right?
@lillys moref BRO you never did. If you can't handle an argument don't start it.
When your dad just wants to look at your loose tooth
this is way more relatable than it shouldve been
So true 😂🤣
😭
TRUE
TRUE AS HELL
I never let my dad come near me when my teeth were loose.
Borb: RELEASE ME YOU FOOLISH MORTAL
*Yanks feather*
Borb: hmm... This will suffice
For everyone wondering, blood feathers are normal they’ll happen a few times in a birds life. They get them by crashing into things, or falling. You have to find the feather that is bleeding, and pull it out to stop the bleeding. If you don’t, then the bird can bleed to death very fast because they don’t have a lot of blood to begin with. It might hurt them for a second, but it saves their lives.
@@warriorgp4640 huh
@@warriorgp4640 What
@@warriorgp4640 you shut it no one wants your anger here!!!
Get a life or find something better to do!
@@warriorgp4640 big talk from a 7 year old
@@warriorgp4640 you shut up no one needs your stupid opinion go to some other comment !!!!!
Here are some lessons:
1. Feathers have been used for quills for untold centuries because they can wick up ink and then the pressure against paper extrudes it again.
2. Feathers are connected to a birds circulatory system. They NORMALLY don't flood with blood because when they are healthy and undamaged, they will not actually wick up the blood.
3. That only works if the feather is UNdamaged. If there is a break or crack in the feather's shaft, that feather is now acting like an open tube in an artery. The blood will not stop. The skin at the base is mostly or completely undamaged so it can't close the wound (since it's in the feather). The *feather* has no structures to stop blood loss.
Result: bird bleeds to death.
Solution:... THIS. Pull out the feather, the skin seals up, blood loss stops. Bird lives.
These people are caring and awesome and saved the bird's life. Absolutely amazing people!! They did it as quickly as possible to make it as painless as possible.
Thank you for explaining with this level of detail.
Wait so a crack thats just barely big enough to let blood seep out is fatal?
@@wavemade2313 Yes. It's like when blood doesn't coagulate under certain conditions and even a superficial wound, if it doesn't stop, can lead to serious problems.
Another example would be a little wound after some teeth extraction. If there's bacteria surrounding the wound, no matter how little the wound may be or how little the bacteria are, that entrance will lead directly to the brain and cause devastating damage.
It's sort of like that one "thread" that, if pullen out, can cause the entire "cloth" to dismantle.
I had a situation years ago where, after an accident playing sports, I got a small fracture in my hand, but back then, since it was only general check-ups, it was looked as something light. Months later that same year, I started having these frequent and more intense pains in my left arm's wrist. I went to a specialist with my family and this time, I took a resonance test (which allows for a completely clean view on bones, which regular check-ups fail because there's a lot of other organic material, like muscles, and what-not, that doesn't allow for a clear view).
The results were a small, yet growing fracture on a specific part of the wrist.
So, normally, when a bone breaks, it is capable of regenerating by making contact with the part that is supposed to have been connected with.
However, here's the catch: The regenerative process can only be acomplished if the two ends make contact, which wasn't the case with the little fracture I had, since there was a considerable hole in-between that wasn't filled with bone tissue, so instead of getting better, the parts kept distancing from each other.
That's why, since I'm left-handed, whenever I wrote, my hand started to hurt. Back then, I was in my last year of high school, and months passed without me getting a surgery to fill in the gap in-between the injury.
Basically, it was a slight pain initially, but then it escalated to the point where I was in such a pain that I almost literally lost my last year of high school because of my inability to write. It was that bad.
Eventually, surgery happened and it hurt like hell, but managed to get through it, though, my wrist isn't exactly as "mobile" as before, but, I mean, better that than losing my mobility altogether, right?😅
Anyway, I brought it up as an experience I wanted to share and let you know that the biggest things always start small, and with this little birdy-pal there's no exception!
God bless you and I hope that what I've said enriches your knowledge!❤💙🤍💫🕊
@@jonathancarrion0809XXI ty for the knowledge!!! I didnt know and wouldnt have guessed that bone needed to touch even though that does make sense once explained 💗💗
@@ThirrinDiamond No problem! For the most part, it's like glue; you'd need to put both ends as closely as possible. Otherwise, either it doesn't heal properly or at all.
Thank god the positive comments are burying the negative ones so I don’t see them. Also I’m glad the birb is okay!
Bird: “YOU SON OF A- Oh well thank you 😏”
y’all realize that was the right feather? it was clearly bent/broken which can cause the developing feather to bleed. blood feathers don’t just start randomly bleeding unless they’re damaged
Casually hearts it 😂
Everyone's being cancerous
So i need some help with my bird,so please answer me of you know anything! I have two male Indian ringnecks, one of them started to molt in January and his molting was pretty quick, however the other one one started molting 4 months ago and still hasn't stopped,well i don't know if he's molting ,I'm afraid it's actually plucking. I saw his behavior slowly changing during his molting , i know molting can cause a lot of stress but he's still stressed now, I'm afraid he's plucking his feathers because it's only on his chest and tail. The thing that worries me the most is that he plucks out his tail feathers to the point of bleeding, the other bird is fine and they're used to their environment and have good food, but i think the molting started to stress him a lot and he can't recover anymore. Please help me I'm lost and i don't want him to suffer anymore. Thank you
@@icowwol2147 i think the birds should go to the vet and get some antibiotics thats all i can do man and also try to cure the wounds with thyme tea (if they have any wounds)
@@phrog5003 okay I'll do my best,thank you!
He’s alive thank you 🐥
Lol. And this was a year ago... Looks like the people in the comments are WRONG as usual
Oh good ❤
All the people in the comments can do is just REEE
Nighttale233, people were worried for the bird, which is more than i can say for you.
Cockatiels are so special
Anyone else notice how the bird seems slightly less freaked out after the feather is pulled? Like, after the small scream it just looks around like-
"Wait, why DID you do that?"
You can clearly tell how well taken care of that burd is, they can absolutely bite hard enough to draw blood. All the burd did was a little nervous nibble, it was well behaved and had plenty of time and room to refuse getting it pulled out. You did it fast and efficiently while still being gentle and trying to calm it as much as possible. Good job saving your bird’s life
Shut up jellybean pfp
Very good job.
My mom had a cockatiel that mostly nibbled, but he was very gentle. If only my nephew had learned to leave his cage alone, he would have been at our house for a long time.
Honestly considering how much pain the poor thing was in, that went smoothly and the bird clearly trusts you. Sweet baby.
As it trys to bite their fingers off
@@JustaDislikeButton That bird could have bitten way harder. Even a cocktail can draw blood when properly provoked.
@@JustaDislikeButton a cockatiel could very easily draw blood if it wanted to. It barely nipped him.
@@JustaDislikeButton how would you react if a giant hairless animals picked you up restrained your movement and ripped out part of you for the situation the bird was calm
@@theeguy9022 not saying it shouldn't have bitten him just saying if it trusts him so much it wouldn't have bitten him.
Poor bugger, that wee yelp. I had a cockatiel as a kid, used to shout “Ya fucker” at people and animals he didn't like. His replacement didn't swear sadly but I taught him to say “tits”. RIP Casper and Casper II.
They knew what they where sayin 🐦
Omg i can imagine that so vividly
That bird sounded fun to be around
@@theguythatasked5811 both lovely birds, they both liked to be handled and sit on my shoulder. Not sure why I've never had one as an adult to be honest, though I have three cats that like to hunt so it probably isn't the best idea. I couldn't leave a bird in a cage constantly.
Oh my goodness that is the best!! What legends!
Notice how she was biting and acting up leading up to the blood feather being removed, then settled right down afterwards. I know nothing about birds but I can tell that was relieving for her.
I absolutely hate these People that don't know shit about any animals and say that this kind of thing is animal abuse
Me too
Yeah
@@adislikebutton4182 They hate people who don’t know what’s happening or think the bird is being abused.
Well it’s wings are clipped and they didn’t clip the wings correctly so that’s how they got a blood feather.
It is animal abuse because your not supposed to clip their wings.
actually the bird survived because if they didn’t trim off the blood feather the bird could actually die so that’s why they trimmed the blood feather
Blood feathers for everyone asking are broken or damaged feathers. Basically their feathers work similar to the human arteries where they push blood in and through them. This is the same reason they can be used to write as the empty tube where the blood is stored also holds ink well hence the quill feather.
The issue is, that birds circulatory systems push blood through quick, and they're small so there isn't much blood to be had, so when a feather breaks it will continue to bleed until it is removed which can cause the poor bird to bleed out and die in as little as half an hour or even much much less depending on the severity of the break and number of breaks.
If you see your bird bleeding from it's feathers, do what this guy did identity the broken feather and quickly but sharply pull and remove the feather. It will hurt the bird, but can and will save his lil life. Hope that clears things up!
Thanks for the explanation! Now I have an idea on what to do if my imaginary bird ever gets this predicament
@@keke9833 you'd be surprised, I've had to do this twice for just wild birds who got hurt or attacked by cats
I'm scared this will happen to my bird because he doesn't like to be handled the same way as the bird in the video and will bite the hell outta anyone who tries
Nobody is asking
Wow I never knew that.
I just think it’s hilarious that all the people in the comments talking about how they’re cruel for taking out this feather clearly don’t know anything about birds. Guys it’s OK to not be educated on something but don’t try to demonize people just because you don’t understand.
YES THIS COMMENT
Amen god dammit
aNiMaL jUsTiCe
Nobody is saying they are cruel
Literally have not seen one comment saying that
for everyone wondering where all the stupid "animal justice" comments actually are, its the classic feedback loop of being flooded with backlash, then deleting the comment
The people who talked about taking out the feather being wrong were in the previous era of this comment section so we’re shoved to the bottom of comments, we are now in the wiser era of a comment section
It's funny the feather might have been pulled in the wrong spot. You're supposed to grab the base near the skin and pull from there otherwise you create a straw where blood pools out. I don't think they got the base out in the video but I'm sure they did after the filming. It should be said to grab the base of the feather, not the tip, or you have a good chance of not getting the whole thing out.
Birb not pleased, not happy, is angry: *Does not bite human hard enough to pierce skin*
Me: Birb loves his human
Edit: Forgot I commented here and hot damn…it exploded…with a comment war to boot.
Cockatiels can be trained not to bite. I had one who would attack my hand when I held a spoons, lipstick, Hatsume Miku, and my Xbox controller; doing the head motions, beak open, but never pinched or touched my skin; an air bite.
There’s even a RUclips video of a cockatiel doing the same when another birb was being given scratches.
It is possible
Cringy aas comments 😬 , when will it end i wonder
@@hyperdiper5067 it is pretty cringy, but its true, the little bird was really cute and obviously trusts his humans
@@hyperdiper5067 almost as bad as stupid pointless comments likes yours:)
@@smoke8715 why are you butthurt moron ?
Your comment expressed nothing except that you're another douchebag who writes these cancerous comments...idiot
Yeah, every cockatiel we've owned we allowed to basically have an open cage (closed it when opening house doors of course just in case), they were pretty well behaved and always came back to their cage.
...but...
Every time I stuck my hand in there to clean the cage they would bite the shit out of me. Break the skin every single time, they'd make you bleed like a stuck pig.
We tried to tame them, they would fly around, land on us, we'd think "oh cool, they finally trust us" as they snuggle on our neck...
*BITE EARLOBE*
"Son of a bitch!!!" getting up bleeding from ear, hanging on like a predator that just found it's dinner.
Yeah, no. The cockatiel phase did not last long. We later got some finches. Those were cool birds.
Damn, snatched his gang affiliation just like that.
Off the streets finally! Thank you uploader 🙏🏾
HAHAHAHAHAHHAHA
THIS KILLED ME
Best comment
What?
These guys did really good. The biting was probably a reaction to the fact that was in pain and bleeding out. And he doesn't exactly have a lot of blood to spare. They talked to the bird calmly to help keep him calm, held him so that he wasn't moving too much, and quickly removed the bent and broken feather that was obviously causing him a lot of pain. I'm sure the pain was like pulling out a sticker that you've stepped on and jammed deep into your foot. It hurts for a little bit, but after a while the spot heals up and the bird is perfectly fine. To leave the obviously damaged feather there would have absolutely been abuse. They did this in the most painless way possible and saved the little bird's life. Way to go
Agreed!!
Agreed!
He seriously went like: Æ
The bird went: AAAAA! And then literally calmed down instantly. It’s clear they helped this bird. Stop saying it’s animal abuse
People think saving birds from bleeding to death is animal abuse-?…. Tf.?
I don’t see any comment about abuse. Must have got bombed for sure and deleted them.
sometimes people will call anything animal abuse and it's sad because there's so much actual abuse that needs to be stopped but people are focusing on stuff like this. if it hurts the animal short term but prevents a very dangerous condition it's not abuse, it's caring for your animal properly.
I once saw an idiot say that these owners of a cat with a medical condition that causes weight gain, abusers even though they cant control it and have been trying to do everything they can to help their cat lose weight. Some people toss words around so much, so idiotic.
Stfu. No one is saying that.
I can pretty much hear him yelling, "OUCH!!"
He did sqeak
More like *FUCK*
@@nitrogenjutsu5178 I like to think that every time an animal makes a yelping type of sound that sounded sad, their actually saying a curse word or "Look where you're standin' f××khead!" Type of talk lol
More like *FUCK SHIT*
That little yelp he made broke my heart 😞 Pulling out a blood feather is so, so painful.
I love that I can actually see how gently the bird is being held. Something about it just makes me smile
The moment when everybody with a heart goes "aww..... 😢"
The fact he didn't bite you hard enough to make you bleed even when he was in pain and scared shows just how much he trusted you. Thankyou for dealing with this quickly and efficiently
I was thinking that as well :P
Y'all stop saying "He pulled out the wrong one", this video has been posted 3 year ago and the owner said that the bird is fine and alive. If it was the wrong one the bird would've died and this video wouldn't be posted.
How exactly do we know it's the wrong feather though? The one her pulled looked out of place on the bird, I'm not an expert. I'm just asking for clarification.
@@bluhearts5216 the one that was pulled was broken but it wasn’t the one that was the actual blood feather
@@bluhearts5216 people are saying it was a bent feather but not a blood feather, so they didn’t pull out the thing causing the blood but they pulled a feather that wasn’t really supposed to be there anyway
This logic is baffling
This Bill guy is an idiot
ah, poor guy was probably a bit confused, but he must feel so much better now.
Finally the last ingredient I need for my potion
*Plop*
m a g i c
What's a blood feather? Sounds like an ingredient in a witch's potion. ⚗
They are feathers that are still growing and still have blood in them. If one breaks, a bird could bleed out if the bleeding does not stop
@@katrinalowrance6249 ouchies..
A mercenaries comes in to the Witch's shop...
Mercenaries : Excuse me, I'd just collected 12 blood feather from the dozen of Giant Blood Owl corpses from the Deep Haunt Forest...Were these quest items enough to fulfill the rewards?
Witch : I said Magical Feather from the Mythical Griffin, not THAT!...No...Keep searching that ACTUAL quest items...🤦🏻♀️
(FYI : This is just a joke...)
😂 😂 😂
So true
“AH- oh that feels nice”
😂 even I felt relief when they pulled it out!
I love how it seemed calmer as soon as it was removed. Kind a "See that wasn't so bad" moment
The cutest Ouch you’ll ever hear .
That was the manliest cry ive ever heard, stay tough little fella
People: people saying he pulled the wrong feather are wrong!
Me: cannot find a single comment saying they pulled the wrong feather
Same 🤣🥲
They all got shoved to the bottom of the comment section
Either shoved or they got embarrassed and deleted
I found two so far in the comments of the comments above yours but I’m tired of looking now 😂
Same
hold birb gentle like hamburger
Lik hambuorg
yeah :)
@@itzz_iz_i mik hmaborug
@@toraphire Ik hmbroug
@@itzz_iz_i l hobamueg
At first I didn’t understand……….I thought you were hurting it!!!!!
WOW!!!! I didn’t know such things 🙄
Which is WHY it’s important to watch to the end before jumping off the proverbial cliff.
Thank you for fixing that naughty feather 🪶!!!
Owner: treats an obviously fucked up feather
Comment section: absolutely fuckin not
Idk bro I haven’t seen a single comment talking about why this is a bad thing, even when sorting by new. Please correct me if I’m wrong
Nvm I saw like 3 comments saying that it’s bad right under yours.
@@RishiJalukar tbh I'm not seeing any which is surprising
@@RishiJalukar *nevermind i jinxed myself*
Watch your mouth
You could tell the bird trusts the humans because he’s not fighting all that hard. They did a good job of working as quickly as they could while still being gentle.
i said “aww” at the same time as them 😭
Finally someone who actually takes care of their cute birds and will do ANYTHING to keep it from getting hurt and let it have a good life
Everyone saying that there are people who are saying they pulled out the wrong feather.
Me trying to look for them 👀
There are a bunch of them, the guys got mostly buried
Same
They got rekt by another comments
Sort by new
@lillys moref I made a troll remark to you in another thread but here I'll be serious cause it's worth the knowledge. First and foremost most birds shouldn't be pets. Imagine living in a single room house that's just big enough for your whole life. It would drive you insane. There are, however, birds that have been domesticated enough that can tolerate it and honestly it's fine to have them as pets. I'm thinking more exotic birds. Anywho that's neither here nor there cause I'm rambling. Now on to clipping wings. If your bird is pretty docile and well trained then yeah you probably don't need to clip the wings. But here's some legit reasons as to why you should and actually which ones. If you have ceiling fans and you want to let your bird out to explore a bit. If they are injured and need to rest. If they are a non native species and there's a risk of them flying away. And probably some other reasons that I don't want to keep going on with. When I had I quaker parrot I would clip his wings cause he'd like to explore around when I let him out of his cage. To actually keep him safe his wings were clipped cause I would regularly have the ceiling fans going and he legit flew the blades once and nearly gave me a heart attack. Now back to clipping wings. You should never clip the entire wing. Even if you know what you are doing. All you have to do is clip a couple of the feathers on each side of the inside of the wing known as the flight feathers. These feathers are far more important for flight. By clipping only a couple you don't necessarily take away the full power of flight but rather make it more difficult for them. They usually can gain a bit of height but tire out quickly as it's more of a chore for them to keep aloft. Also you only clip the inside of the wing because cosmetically it looks better. When they have their wings to their side it looks normal still. Only when they spread their winds should it be noticable but just barely if you did a good job.
Human was gentle, he did not force the bird to be handled, you can see the bird had plenty of chance to get out of his grasp. Bird did not like being handled, yet knew it was for a reason. Bird.
For those bring politics into this, it has nothing to do with that. People get bored and have no understanding of handling an animal, and are looking for attention so they get pointlessly mad and other people that didnt think of what they said first follow along for likes
Agreed. Birb.
Exactly, it’s honestly a shame that offended liberal retards mostly bitch on Animal-related videos.
@@captainazrale4404 what did this have to do with someone’s political affiliation
@@IgnatiaWildsmith1227 He’s actually being pretty accurate. A lot of people on Facebook like that
@@crispywhites3343 true but when it comes to facebook both sides do it imo
So no one is gonna talk about how this birds wings are clipped. Which is probably what caused the bird to have a blood feather.
Your right! They are clipped, though it’s possible the bird couldn’t fly straight they might have just clipped them for no real.
ohh... I just noticed. Maybe it's for medical reasons, i hope.
It was so cute when he made that ‘’Yelp’’ sound it brighten my day
Guys, if that was the wrong feather, then which was the right one? That one was all bent out of shape and half hanging off.
It was the right feather, people are just uneducated.
@lillys moref If there were multiple then the bird would be dead, it is very much alive though
Damn seeing a cockatiel breaks my heart because mine recently passed away 😭😭
Sorry!
I can relate. When mine died, I literally cried whenever I saw a cocktiel. Even now it brings me to tears whenever I think of her.
@stormdraws thanks. I hope she is happier now.
@stormdraws do you have any pets?
@stormdraws Great pain awaits you and me.
what a cutie! i love how gentle they are being with her. she said: AÊ
That little "ow!" was the cutest thing I've ever heard.
I keep seeing people say "for those of you who think it's the wrong feather.." And honestly just wanna know what other feather they could possibly have pulled out
the wrong feather
where.
@@joboy5806 just scroll through the comments, people keep saying that other people are saying they pulled the wrong feather
It was clearly the wrong feather, birds are a conspiracy by the government to spy on us, blood feathers are actually made to contain blood samples from their attacks, so you can see the blood on the inside cause they are like glass vials smh.
@@Serrifin this is a joke correct?
well wow, i see there are a lot of experienced zoologists in the comments. good to know!
I’ve studied small animal care, I can tell you that they pulled the wrong feather and could have caused the bird harm. They didn’t do any research, clearly, as they’d know that wasn’t the correct feather if they had. :)
@@SweetAeromotion talk me back when you will show me your books :P
@@amtadoptmetrades6024 I mean if you’d like to see my qualifications I’m more than happy to post a public picture and give you the link honey, I’m more than aware what I’m talking about. :)
@@SweetAeromotion send it please I'll gladly take it
@@lollol-el8oy she's only qualified on Twitter they do know what they're doing and they did remove the correct feather the feather they removed was a blood feather, it's a feather that's still growing and has blood in it, the feather got damaged if they did not remove the feather the bird could have bled out and died the bent feather that everyone saw is also damaged but it's nothing serious and its common on birds who are allowed to fly around in there homes
You were reassuring like “it’s ok we’re gonna help you” and I madly respect that
Poor baby, yes he's fine. His whine made me want to cry.
This bird gently resisting while having a broken feather plucked: ouch 🥺
My birds when I try to gently lift them to get them into their travel cage: screaming like I'm murdering them, biting through my gauntlet I have to wear to protect myself.
They're very young and untamed, but we're making progress.
Amazing news! I gave my boy a dry mealworm and he was so bewitched by that crunchy treat that he forgot about my fingers and actually nibbled on them to get every crumb 🤣
@@birdgirl8390 good job! I hope you manage to bond more with them soon
@lillys moref
The hand will be bad for a while but at least he got that hurtful and dangerous feather out of him. All worth it.
@lillys moref actually no this kind of bird when it bites can do a lot of damage it was just reacting uncomfortably if it was being hurt or wanted to bite the guy his finger would be in pieces
My dad had a Bird that fell asleep in his hands, i was around 2 or 3 when My cousin brought his cat and when he Saw his cat in My dad's room, he Freed the bird so the cat could eat it.
The steady and fast hands. Everything about this video just shows how much these two love and trust each other 🥺❤
I vocally whimpered at the bird's little yelp 😭😭 but I'm glad they're helping it, even if it hurts a bit
You made the right decision helping that bird, I don’t understand why some think it’s animal abuse when it isn’t.
i love how the bird went 'ouch' and both people at the same time went 'aww'
That 'ouch' and 'aww' made me both sad and happy at the same time, the 'aww' is was soo cuuuute
The collective "Awe" at the end really showed me how much they love that baby 😭💜.
To me it was the sound 💔 im glad he had only one injuried feather he suffered for a second and he was healed 😊
That bird has so much trust and love for these people. This is so heartwarming. Still a bit frightened but I can only imagine the relief! ❤️
Oh my gosh the “awhh.. :/“ from the people in the background was so genuinely sympathetic, it hurts mah heart :(
"Be firm, he's not a baby"
All he is doing is reassuring him that he is in good hands.
I always talk calmly with my pets when they are in pain or scared.
Good point! Being reassuring, supportive and calming is not infantilizing. Not to any being, whether it's a bird or a human or any other species.
If time is a factor it is cruel to risk the pets life by cuddle and reassuring it. Cuddles can be given when the life is saved. Birds don't have much blood to lose. Maybe the owner just loves their oyets more than you do. I always prioritize saving lives my self. Cuddling comes second.
@@ThundrGurl but this is not that type of situation? Did you watch the video at all? 😅
@@idamelisen so you're telling me that you don't know a thing about birds and how fast they bleed out? Ok message received. But some of us actually do care about our pets and educate our selves on what they need.
@@ThundrGurl omg stfu dude😂
Aw, lol the birds little "ouch!" is so adorable. Sweetie gonna be okay now. Thank you mama & daddy ❤️
“It’s ok, he’s not a baby”
*”BOY THATS A BABY, HES SO CUTE”*
i like how everyone says “aww 🥺” after he made that squeak. you can tell they love and have compassion for it, people like that usually have compassion for all life ❤️🌎🐾
I know he feels much better now. Y'all did a good job. He must be a well-loved bird to be so trusting.
These types of wing injuries kill so many beautiful birds because of infection. Great job fellas
Actually not from infection but from bleeding out , a bird will die if the broken blood feather isn't removed cause a growing feather has direct connection to the birds blood stream but after the feather if done growing the vain seals itself and the shaft forms blockage inside that prevents anymore blood from entering.
I love how gentle and reassuring everyone was, amazing to see great teamwork, even the tiel behaved very well! Hope it got lots of treats for it's trouble and recovered well!
Awe, that poor baby. I'm glad they took care of it so quickly and caused minimal pain. Blood feathers must be very uncomfortable.
Wrong. They are also fatal.
I just love it how u were so patient and soothing while trying to help, ur such a wonderful pet owner 🥺
WHY ARE YOU CRYING????????
But yeah, I agree.
The way everyone says “aww” are the same time
"We gotta do this"
"I don't wanna tho"
"Get ready"
"Can I at least have something in my mou-
*yanks broken feather*
"FECK"
"Awwww"
Ouch I imagine that would feel like an ingrown toenail, ahhh the relief once its out
Well yea but mix ingrown toenail with imminent death and that’s what a blood feather is if it’s not pulled out the bird will die of blood loss
Yeah but mix that with bleeding out
@@arandompersonwhoisrandom3985 they were comparing the pain and relief not the amount of danger.
He was such a brave little birdie! I’m so proud of him
before anyone freaks out, the bird damaged their blood feather, it’s a feather connected straight to a vein, and they will bleed to death if it is damaged. if your bird has a fine blood feather, leave it alone. if it is broken, take it out immediately. it will hurt for a quick bit, but it’s much better than dying
To save weight birds don't have a lot of blood. So the source of bleeding must be taken care of rather quickly.
That was a good job removing that.
That was quick and (almost) painless for the bird, that was done well and by the way he’s talking to the bird I know he’s a good owner.
Flawlessly done, very fluid and controlled movements throughout the whole ordeal.
Aww, that lil Yelp! Poor thing, so glad the lil cockatiel is ok 👍 💗
The little "eee" when the feather was plucked 😭
I just noticed he got the wrong one lol it’s small not big
Oof
no that’s the right one i thin
It's the right one,it might not be big but it was hurting so,1x0 to the COCKATIEL
Poor birb D:
@@vinnyvv. the right one is a Pin feather (Newly grown feather) it has a vein inside the shaft that causes the bleed. Trust me the feather he pulled was a bent one and wasn’t even covered with blood enough for it to be the cause and do not have any vains in them anymore and got pulled out Easily because it’s a fully grown feather.
Poor little birdie looks so scared and in pain, but clearly trusts you enough to not bite too hard or struggle too much. You're doing really good work.
The way it looks around like "oh, it's over?" 😂
The "ow" tho
i love how you can just grab a birb like that its so cute
Aww what a grumpy baby!! Good job on pulling it out, i would be so scared doing it with my own birds haha
He pulled the wrong feather
@@ThatsBitFunny this vid is from 3 years ago and the bird is alive and well 😂
@lillys moref it literally does lmao. Broken blood feathers kill them if not pulled out.
@lillys moref birds don’t have much clotting agent in their blood, so its still dangerous to let them bleed out
@lillys moref hey... do you even own a bird??
Hooman: it’s ok
Birb: no it’s not!
Hooman:ready?
Birb:NONONONONO
hooman:we’re gonna help ya don’t worry
Birb:LET ME GO PEASANT
Lol when I was a kid I used to think “why does everyone paint pikachu cheeks on those birds?”
Aw that's squeak was heartbreakingly cute